Where’s Tim’s Ted?

Where’s Tim’s Ted?

by Ian Whybrow (Author), Russell Ayto (Illustrator)

Synopsis

All's quiet on Granny and Grandad's farm as night falls. But Tim's Ted is missing and Tim can't sleep without him...

So, in the middle of the night, Tim hops out of bed, pulls his boots on and slips out into the farmyard to look for him. The hens in the henhouse haven't seen Ted and neither have the cows. Before long, Pacer the horse, the ducks, the goats and the sheep have all joined the torchlit hunt for Ted, but it is only when the motley search party reaches the pig sty that Tim finds out where his beloved toy has been hiding.

This wonderful story of a torchlit midnight adventure, within the comforting surroundings of Tim's grandparents' farm, will thrill children and is perfect for reading aloud with its rhyming, rhythmic text. Russell Ayto's quirky illustrations are packed with a zany cast of animal characters and gather pace with the story perfectly.

Where's Tim's Ted is the perfect bedtime reader for the very young, but with its rhyming text it's also a natural for slightly older children, who will begin to recognise the correlation between the words on the pages and those in their memory each time they hear it.

AGE 2-6

$3.24

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Picture Book
Pages: 32
Edition: New e.
Publisher: Picture Lions
Published: 05 Jun 2000

ISBN 10: 0006646387
ISBN 13: 9780006646389
Children’s book age: 0-5 Years

Media Reviews
Tim may be little but he's capable of great things, especially when his Ted seems to have gone missing. In Where's Tim's Ted? by Ian Whybrow, illustrated by Russell Ayto, he sets out at night and, after frisking the farm animals, discovers Ted in the embrace of a large pig. My favourite illustration shows the sulky pig and little Ted fast asleep together. The animals are sprightly, the ending sleepily safe. Observer, Oct.'99
Author Bio

Ian Whybrow is best known for his original humour and he always writes with adult readers as well as young ones in mind. He has a brilliant ear for voices and takes pride in the fact that his work reads aloud very well. He lives in Harrow-on-the-Hill and teaches at the John Lyon School. He has a house in Herefordshire where he does the bulk of his writing, during the school holidays. His wife Ann is also a teacher and they have two daughters, one of whom is Lucy Whybrow, the actress.